It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of
wisdom, it was the age of foolishness…
So said
Charles Dickens, in A Tale of Two Cities. Substitute "food" for
"times" and you have the key to this post. I thought it might be fun
to take a quick look at the food highs and lows of this past year for the
writer-chefs of Mystery Lovers' Kitchen—and you!
Pop quiz
(no grades!):
B. Or, if
there are too many memorable examples to pick from, what food did you try for
the first time in 2012?
C. What's
the worst thing you ate this past year, the one thing you will never, ever try
again and will warn all your friends and relatives to stay away from?
We at MLK
would love to hear about your culinary experiences, both good and bad.
I'll start
off. Here are my examples:
A. Yes, too many to count, so I'll skip ahead to
C. Durian.
This was something I'd heard of but never met face to face. I came upon it at a trendy Thai restaurant
called Pok Pok in Brooklyn. It is a
large thorny fruit that stinks, so why do people eat it? Well, as one of my tablemates at the
restaurant said, "it smells like **** but it tastes like
heaven." At Pok Pok it was served
in a dessert, in the form of a custard on sweet sticky rice. The **** odor was noticeable, at least at
first taste; the "heaven" part might be a bit exaggerated, although
it was pleasant enough, or at least, not awful. Anyway, I'm not
going back for more, but I'm happy to check durian on my bucket list.
I had a glazed donut this week that is coming to mind screaming "choose me!"
ReplyDeleteBut if I can push that donut aside, I'd say a slice of pizza with prosciutto topping.
I did not enjoy the big greasy wad of fois gras that came on a recent hamburger:). My friend Lyn took it off my hands... (I know, what kind of foodie am I??)
I meant to mention that the pizza was eaten in Rome...
DeleteI had durian once when we were driving through Malaysia from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur. The driver stopped at a roadside fruit/vegetable stand and showed them to use. I did try some...kind of like a coconut custard. Also tried mangosteens but have no recollection of how they tasted. All the hotels in Southeast Asia had a sign with a picture of a durian with a red ban symbol through it! They DO stink. I was floored when I saw a woman buying one at our local Asian market. Had no idea they imported them.
ReplyDeleteSheila, Durian sounds like some smelly cheeses! LOL Smell like ick, taste divine.
ReplyDeleteHappy new year to all who read our blog and our books. We certainly appreciate you.
Daryl /Avery
Best fish taco in Morro Bay :)
ReplyDeleteThe best was salted dark chocolate covered caramels. They fly out of the store! Simply delicious.
ReplyDeleteI tried pea shoots for the first time. They're so good. You eat them raw in a salad or instead of lettuce on a sandwich. They taste just like peas!
Wow. Hard to recall the worst. I know I made a few dishes that were so bad that I didn't post them here! LOL!
~ Krista
I've been experimenting with Turkish food this year since my son and his family will be stationed there this coming new year. I love the lamb kababs I made. The Turkish grocery store where I buy the lamb sells the best!!!!! The worst food I've had is not really a food, but it goes in your mouth - Turkish chewing gum. YUK!!! It's like chewing tough rubber bands with no flavor. Nasty. But alas; I must do something about my weight so it's Weight Watchers for me at the moment. Still enjoy reading MLK and will just have to imagine how wonderful your recipes taste!!!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year.